Las Vegas Review-Journal

Area jolted by shooting unchanged

Neighborho­od in Baton Rouge seeks progressiv­e action

- By Michael Kunzelman The Associated Press

BATON ROUGE, La. — A year ago, Abdullah Muflahi rushed outside his convenienc­e store, whipped out his cellphone and began taping moments before a white police officer shot and killed a black man in the parking lot.

Muflahi’s video fueled nightly protests that turned his friend, 37-yearold Alton Sterling, into another symbol of outrage over deadly police shootings. The July 5 shooting also transforme­d Muflahi’s store into a hub for protesters and a canvas for their grief and anger.

Visitors routinely stop by the

Triple S Food Mart to photograph an iconic mural of Sterling’s smiling face on its aluminum siding. A makeshift memorial still stands on the table where Sterling once sold homemade CDS outside.

Nothing has changed in this poverty-stricken neighborho­od since the shooting — a frustratin­g fact of life for residents and business owners who had hoped a national spotlight on their problems could erode racial divisions and improve police relations in Louisiana’s capital.

“It’s overlooked. It’s not much that the city does around here,” Muflahi said. “There are things that the city could fix and help make it better, but nobody looks at it like that.”

Muflahi, 29, a native of Yemen, mourns Sterling as the friend who introduced himself as “Big Boy” and welcomed him after he moved here from Detroit and bought his store in 2010.

“He’s the one who actually showed me around and looked out for me,” Muflahi said.

The shooting strengthen­ed Muflahi’s bond with neighbors who protested outside the store after Sterling’s death. But Muflahi said store revenue also plummeted and has been slow to rebound.

A federal investigat­ion found the confrontat­ion with the two white officers, Blane Salamoni and Howie Lake II, lasted less than 90 seconds.

In May, the Justice Department announced it will not file criminal charges against either officer. Louisiana’s attorney general is reviewing whether any state charges are warranted. The officers remain on paid leave.

Donna Harris, 41, a nurse, lives nearby and joined the protests. A year later, she’s still waiting for some reason to be optimistic.

“Nothing got better. Nothing changed,” she said. “They haven’t even given us justice for Alton.”

State Rep. Ted James, a Baton Rouge Democrat and native of the area, said he sees some progress.

But he also sees enduring racial divisions and acknowledg­es that predominan­tly black north Baton Rouge — where Sterling lived and died — still suffers from a longstandi­ng “lack of investment.”

“That type of long-term change is going to take time,” he said. “Things are happening. I recognize it’s not happening as fast as folks would like to see it.”

 ?? Gerald Herbert ?? The Associated Press A memorial and mural mark the food mart in Baton Rouge where Alton Sterling, 37, was shot and killed by police a year ago.
Gerald Herbert The Associated Press A memorial and mural mark the food mart in Baton Rouge where Alton Sterling, 37, was shot and killed by police a year ago.

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